Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Sẹ́gun
4.4K posts

Sẹ́gun
@ijigbami_
Software. National Security. Former Medicaid LTSS Policy and Programs Director in Kansas. ex-Soldier. I tweet 🇺🇸 & 🇳🇬
Kansas City, MO Katılım Ağustos 2011
791 Takip Edilen377 Takipçiler

@ijigbami_ @egi_nupe Bro why did you think he Granted full L.G Autonomy, Although the same Governor are still fighting against it behind the scene, but i believe with his policy there is light at the end of the tunnel.
English

Let us even have serious conversation and end this once and for all.
We all agreed that subsidy was due to go! All the major and serious candidates had a common ground on the immediate removal of fuel subsidy.
Again, we agreed that as a result of the President’s statement that “subsidy is gone” price of fuel and other things went up.
Follow me.
We all can confirm that more money is being generated and more money is shared to states as FAAC allocation on monthly and regular basis?
What should the President to do states that are not applying the allocation as it should be? Remove their Governors? Stop giving them money?
𝐇𝐢𝐝𝐢𝐦𝐚, 𝐏𝐡.𝐃.@Realoilsheikh
Removing subsidies and pumping the money to these governors was never for the benefit of the people. The cruelty has been well planned. He knows that is the resources he need to rig a re-election even when he knows he won't perform.
English

Fair point. However keep in mind that FG gets 52% while 36 states and LGs share ~48%.
However the point is that with viable match and derisk mechanisms, FG can influence (not direct) how SGs and LGs invest.
The current process almost certainly guarantees that the 20% going to the LGs is almost totally stolen or mismanaged.
English

@ijigbami_ @egi_nupe Nigeria and US do not practice the same form of government. Our constitutions are very different. When comparing take note of this. In Nigeria the state governors know how much came into FAAC and it must be shared. Once their citizens start calling them out, they will behave
English

@NationalGridNg He managed the ministry for less than 3 years and stole that much.
System failure.
English

FORMER POWER MINISTER SENTENCED TO 75 YEARS OVER ₦33.8BN MAMBILLA & ZUNGERU PROJECT FUNDS
Federal High Court has sentenced former Minister of Power, Saleh Mamman, to 75 years in prison over the diversion of ₦33.8 billion meant for the Zungeru and Mambilla hydroelectric power projects.
Mamman, who served as Minister of Power from August 2019 to July 2021, was accused of overseeing the alleged diversion of funds during his tenure.
The EFCC said he diverted the funds using some ministry officials, private companies, and Bureau de Change operators.
He was also reported to have purchased the Taraba State APC governorship forms, while separately facing another case at the FCT High Court in Maitama, where he is accused of diverting ₦31 billion meant for the Mambilla Power Project.
Delivering the judgment today, Justice Omotosho sentenced Mamman, who is on the run and was absent at the last court sitting, on each count and ordered that the sentences run consecutively bringing the total to 75 years.
The court also ruled that the sentence will begin to run from the day the convict is arrested, and ordered all security agencies, including Interpol, to apprehend him wherever he is found.
Monies recovered, along with forfeited properties, are to be remitted to the Federal Government, while the convict is also ordered to pay the outstanding balance of ₦22 billion tied to the affected hydroelectric power projects.

English

BREAKING: Court sentences ex-power minister Saleh Mamman to 75 years in prison for N33.8bn fraud
A federal high court in Abuja has sentenced Saleh Mamman, a former minister of power, to 75 years in prison for money laundering and fraud to the tune of N33.8 billion.
Mamman was convicted on all 12 counts preferred against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
thecable.ng/breaking-court…

English

@NigeriaStories He will likely appeal and stall and then Nigeria will happen. He will fund a national party and be forgiven.
English

@moakabash Damn. I was locked in like I don’t have a football team in my house already.
English

Our “Talk Everything Sex” Doctor Abassi was on the Morayo Show again today 😆🔥
And trust us, not even this short clip or caption can contain all the revelations from today’s conversation😂
To catch the full gist and make sure you’re not left out of the juicy, enlighteniconversation, head over to our YouTube page now! Now o😆😆
Youtube page - Morayo Afolabi-Brown.
#explore
#explorepage
#reels
#queenoftalk
#themorayoshow
English

@confindence24 He’s going to lose the election. He’s not widely accepted.
English

Can she give an intellectual speech? What has she accomplished so far?
What has she done for the women in her state?
Caroline Monday@MondayCaroline
I present to you the Incoming First Lady of the Federal Republic of Nigeria with so much steeze. Clear road for who sabi..
English

🚨BREAKING: Yakubu Adamu has been suspended indefinitely with immediate effect by the NFF Refereeing Development Committee from all league & football matters
He’s sanctioned for his decision to award a penalty in Rangers vs Bendel Insurance.
#NPFL26
English

Local investment like modular power and a proper gas distribution strategy can also help.
Outside Lagos and maybe Kano, 15MW power per LG with LG direct investment will go a long way. But not without commitment to some sort of subsidies.
It is expensive for FG but not that expensive if the investment and risk is shared by the FG, SGs and LGs.
English

I am not an expert in power, but this is my understanding. I would like to know whether power experts agree or disagree.
This is my summary
1. Nigeria needs massive investment in power infrastructure
2. Nigeria and Nigerians can't fund this investment because it's in USD; turbines and natural gas
3. To attract investment in Nigerian power, the tariffs paid by the Nigerian consumers have to go up.
4. Nigerian consumers can't afford higher power tariffs.
5. In other nations, the government will subsidize the power cost via subsidies, so that consumers can pay lower today but higher tomorrow as they boost consumption and investment due to power availability.
6. Nigeria also subsidized power to consumers via the Multi-Year Tariff Order MYTO); however, as the MYTO is winding down, the consumers' incomes have fallen, thus it's very hard to raise power tariffs
7. If tariffs don't rise, investors or $ won't come
8. If investors don't come, power generation and distribution will not improve, meaning fewer users of grid power and a higher average power cost.
9. The critical issue is the cost of power paid by consumers, and thus tariffs
guardian.ng/news/rising-en…
English

@Mrchoplifepr @Imranmuhdz Curious, how did you read negativity in this post?
FWIW it’s a brilliant move.
English

@ijigbami_ @Imranmuhdz Is that what he told you ? Or you are just used to negativity in your life
English

@FinPlanKaluAja1 Should the interior ministry be running administrative oversight and paramilitary duties especially given the defective sec architecture of the country?
Probably not.
English

@ogundamisi Interior paramilitary: Police, immigration, border, state police, EFCC should probably be internal?
ONSA should handle DSS, Army and external and overarching architecture.
English

Shadow National Security Adviser?
Imran Muhammad@Imranmuhdz
President Tinubu, has approved the appointment of Major General Adeyinka A. Fadewa (Rtd) as the Special Adviser on Homeland Security.
English










